“I think a rising tide lifts all boats,” said club chairman Mattie Larkin when asked how much their 2017 intermediate win had boosted the game in Ballinderreen. “The intermediate win last year has made us drive on. And this win will make us drive on even further.

“They all came (camogie team). We all went up to that game first and they came back and backed us. It’s a community. It’s not just GAA or camogie. It’s the whole community.

“We’ve had to use fellas in their 40s and there’s fellas of 16 or 17. Seventeen is the youngest, I think. I don’t know what the oldest is, 42 or 43. But that’s what hurling is all about.

“And a small parish, you have to use all your resources and we do. I think it was a team game with the management. To pay tribute to Billy and his selectors, they have a super track record and we can’t say a word to them.”

Manager Billy Carr and selectors Joe Connolly and Noel Linnane are known by many as the three wise men of Ballinderreen. Carr had previously led them to a senior quarter-final in the past and was a selector on Connolly’s team that won the 2011 All-Ireland Junior B championship.

“There mightn’t be any gold or frankincence or myrrh but there’ll be other stuff I’d say,” concluded Larkin when asked about the celebrations. But they’ll hope they’ve started another collection of silverware.